You know how it is. All work and no play make Baby Boomers dull. There's no denying our strong work ethic, but we are also all about having fun. Visit here often and you can kiss dullness - in work and play - good-bye.

"Here life went to a gentler pace, and dreams and dreamers found a place."

For the 42,500,000 people who drive to Florida every year down Interstate 95, Stan Posner and Sandra Phillips-Posner want to make the drive stress-free. To this end, they have diligently charted the 552 exits on I-95 all the way from Boston to Miami. They checked out food options, motels, radar traps, radio stations, 24-hour mechanics, ATM machines, golf courses and places to shop, while also amassing amazing stories to keep travelers entertained.

All this is conveniently found in the 4th edition of the award-winning Drive I-95: Exit by Exit Info, Maps, History and Trivia ( http://www.drivei95.com ). This book gives travelers reasons to make some pit stops in the twelve states along this route where they can try out local food and discover fun stopping places to break up the drive. This is the first edition to include Florida (which occupies 30 all-new pages).

Some I-95 trivia:

You can swim with the sharks at the Adventure Aquarium in Camden, NJ.

Robert E. Lee was the only man in history who was asked to become commander of opposing armies in the same war.

You can buy bags, journals and paper made out of elephant poo at the Capron Park Zoo in MA.

In the Blackstone Valley, RI, you can be lulled to sleep in an authentic 40-ft British canal boat bed and breakfast which has berths for four.

The first large scale programmable computer, ENIAC, found in the U.S. Ordnance Museum in Aberdeen, MD, was designed for the military to help track the trajectory of bullets and to set up firing tables for them. Its first challenge was related to designing the hydrogen bomb.